THIRTY-SEVEN down. One to go.
Liverpool go and win at bottom half Newcastle. They show their class over the course of the 90 minutes and…
…As if you can talk about this being cut and dried. As if this is cool. As if this should become something which is never about how it feels. It feels like everything. All there is is feeling. All there is is being alive.
Tonight I saw all my friends strung out. I saw Emilia Bona rock back and forth while it was 2-2. I saw Ben Johnson with his back to me, on his knees at 2-2 shuddering. Stu Wright sitting on the floor blankly while Mo Salah was injured. Paul Cope in bits. Steve Graves cry for the first time since 2014.
When the final whistle went I sank to my knees, my sobs heavy. Liverpool still alive, Liverpool giving it one more go. I was and have been prepared to bleed, but maybe not quite that much.
It’s no wonder Trent Alexander-Arnold kicks it out of play at times.
Someone made you fall in love with this mad game, these mad men in Red. Someone gave you bad advice, one thing lead to another and years later you are watching Liverpool playing Newcastle United at St. James’ Park in the penultimate game in the closest Liverpool have come to the league title in a generation, and Newcastle equalise making it 2-2 and you and everyone you know is done.
Thirty-seven down. One to go.
The game starts brightly despite the weather. A Virgil van Dijk classic header in the 14th minute feels like a smash and grab. A set piece that will allow Liverpool to control the game. A headstart that will allow the players some breathing space before the biggest week of their footballing lives. Breathing space for us was all that was wanted.
Liverpool are not blameless when it comes to the first equaliser. A scramble in the box allows Newcastle’s Atsu in. Still, we’ve had shaky moments before. We’ve had plenty of dodgy 10 minutes before, and so it appears in the first half of this game as a cool Salah goal 15 minutes later restores the lead and calms heads.
At this point, Newcastle are supposed to give in. They are supposed to give in. But we all know, however much we love him, Rafa Benitez’s Newcastle were never really going to give in. Not with the power and headwind provided by their fans, and frankly the skill and dignity of this Newcastle side.
Lascelles is a leader on the pitch and gets the ball in the correct places. Newcastle look fit and up for it, and Liverpool at times look tired. The Redmen are harried by the physical interventions of their opposition, and Fabinho and Wijnaldum can’t really get control of the game.
Everything became unbelievably difficult. Salomon Rondon doesn’t help, the unplayable bastard. He gives van Dijk a torrid time and leaves Lovren a mess. He is the essence of awkwardness, the definition of a difference maker. Thank Christ they didn’t have Almiron tonight or Liverpool may have been torn asunder.
Liverpool’s opener is a lovely goal; their second an excellent one. A backheel from Daniel Sturridge leads to Arnold’s ball in, which leads to Mo Salah’s delightful finish; Fowler-esque in its innovation.
Liverpool the better side throughout the first half should really find their way to a third and the same can be said for the first 15 of the second half. Chances are missed and defending is last ditch until Rondon scores a beautiful goal, so sweetly struck.
When he does so, what follows make you think that this side that was about to have scored its third will never score again. Hearts sink. Is this it? It that it? Done. And then, there is worse to come.
Mo Salah falls very badly after his head collides with Newcastle’s goalkeeper Dubravka. He falls to the ground and reaches for his head. He barely moves. Our wonderful man, our clever, kind Mo is hurt badly, and it is more than anyone can take.
He is stretchered off and showing solidarity as ever, Rafa reaches out his hand to him as he is carried towards the tunnel, as if even now, Rafa understands how we all feel.
Liverpool are affected by that or the change of shape. Nothing is going to come until the very second it does; until the net bulges, until Divock Origi is there again. Divock is again fortunate, but he is again there to buy a ticket to win the lottery.
At this moment, and for the final 11 minutes as we struggle through eight justified but long minutes of stoppage time, we are watching stories flash before our eyes. We are thinking of all the other 3-3 draws we have ever known. Liverpool have been known to draw games at St. James’ Park before.
We are thinking about the words “bitter” and “sweet” and how fucked up and wrong it is that a team as good as this Liverpool side doesn’t just get all the medals now. We are wondering how long we have to go through this for. We are wondering why there is so much pain in what is supposed to be a fucking leisure activity.
Until the final whistle. Until that final blessed relief comes. And you want to run to that person who made you love The Reds and grab them by the shoulders and tell them perhaps it isn’t all mad and painful after all. Perhaps it does mean something, perhaps there is some point to it all.
Perhaps this love is actually for something. Perhaps it is about the beauty, not just of the glorious gliding cross-field pass, or the power of a undefendable strike, but also of the beauty of these men, fighting for each other, wanting to be with each other, and to win this thing together. That love.
Thirty-seven down. Two to go.
Liverpool win and one more hurdle has been cleared, one more during this remarkable season. They now have 94 points, only beaten the once by the only side that can finish ahead of them. This is a remarkable performance which defines consistency but more than that it defines want.
Liverpool are where they are because they can be, but also because they want it more than anything imaginable. They crave it. Their manager has done an astonishing job of placing that need in them but without overwhelming them by the task.
Two to go. Two to go because there is Monday night, there is that moment when another side becomes something we can so directly get behind. Two to go for these Reds because there are two more things that need to happen and Leicester can make it happen.
Thirty-seven down. Three to go.
Three to go because we get to acclaim our magnificent men on Tuesday night. We get to adore them at Anfield when they face a great side. We get to roar at everyone. We get to live. You’ll be glad of the summer. You’ll be glad of the July 4 when everything works as it should, when your heart isn’t pounding and your knees aren’t buckling.
But it won’t be living. Liverpool have shown you living. And there will be more of it on Tuesday. Let’s roar our defiance; let’s articulate the joy it is to be alive.
Thirty-seven down. Four to go?
It’s unlikely but why not? Why can’t this season have an encore? Why can’t Tuesday night lead to Madrid still? Honestly, lord, the idea of only watching them twice more hurts as much as anything else. These are the best of us. The best of themselves.
They are just a football team, trying to play the best season of their lives. Nothing purer. Nothing sweeter. They’ll do for me.
Thirty-seven down. One to go. Let it break you. Let it leave little meaning and too much emotion. Let it all be about what it feels like. Our lives can be mundane, our football team is anything but.
This is what it is to be alive, my friends. This is what it is to be in love.
Thirty-seven down. One to go.
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“He is stretchered off and showing solidarity as ever, Rafa reaches out his hand to him as he is carried towards the tunnel, as if even now, Rafa understands how we all feel.”
Class act. If Newcastle needed points today we would have lost the game. Lovren’s a liability and the lads are knackered.
Feel bad for Mo. I hope Klopp doesn’t rush him in like Firmino in the last game. Now Firmino is out with the muscle tear originally thought to be grade 1.
With Keita and Lallana out, we’re really clutching at straws against Barcelona.
But I thoroughly enjoyed today’s game despite the misfortune to Mo — something about watching Hendo, Milner, Shaq and Sturridge made me feel like we can just give it another go. Maybe it’s the odd bunch now.
I know sounds daft but I don’t feel the pressure anymore. Whatever happens, on Monday and Tuesday, let’s just go and have a great game!
Thanks Neil. Have a nice weekend.
Hi Sash, Does Jurgen get anything right? I ask as your comment seems to now hold him responsible for Firmino.
Coupled with everything else you have a dig at him over, this appears another.
To fight without question or pause
To be willing to march into hell for the heavenly cause
Thank you Neil. It’s been an amazing journey a lonely one often here in the USA. But you and your team’s work make me feel part of the collective of Liverpool. Thank you. Up the MIGHTY REDS!
Brilliant as always.
Best PMP ever last night by the way… Has anyone from TAW been to Paul Cope’s house today to see if he’s alright :-)
My eyes went a bit moist when I read that bit about Rafa.
Great read Neil, thirty-seven down, four to go makes you realise there is still so much of this season possible.
I know it’s a cliché but, we never do it easy and whatever we do over the coming weeks will not be easy.
“Until the final whistle. Until that final blessed relief comes. And you want to run to that person who made you love The Reds and grab them by the shoulders and tell them perhaps it isn’t all mad and painful after all. Perhaps it does mean something, perhaps there is some point to it all.”
It works the other way too.
I was watching with my youngest daughter. At 2-2 she gave up for a while, she went very still and very quiet.
I felt guilty because it’s down to me because I made her love our team and caused her upset.
Then we win and the joy we both felt at that win after the interminable extra time makes it all worth it.
Those last 8 minutes though. So pleased we had Jimmy Milner & Danny Sturridge on for those last 8 minutes. They knew exactly what to do in those last 8 minutes.
Brilliant piece Niel as per
These redmen deserve this so much ..let us pray ..
I’m with Steve Graves on this one.
All this has to mean something. There has to be a reason for all of this next week.
I refuse to believe this season ends on an anti-climax!
@Titus_Red I agree. I will go out on a limb and say this.
For all the negativity towards Sturridge, Lovren and Origi in the past, it is their unpredictability that I think gives me hope more than anything.
Sturridge’s goals in the past came out of nowhere. That one against Chelsea was superbly taken.
Lovren’s against Dortmund, when everyone and their mother ridiculed him and Moreno for the season’s performances.
Origi’s at Everton and Newcastle are definitely for the highlght reels, but he has scored those unlikely screamers coming in from the left with very tight angles.
I believe these three, along with Shaq, TAA and Ox may yet have some part to play in how our season ends.
It’s going to be very tough, but not impossible on Tuesday.
It could all prove to be a pre-cursor for a new Reds Dynasty. we had moments in time of Yore of being there and there abouts yet nothing for it, only for it to end up spurring us to big and better in following campaigns (I am discussing the era of Shanks and not more recent times).
None of this will be for nothing, regardless of the outcome this season.
@J I wasn’t around during Shankly’s time, but I appreciate what you say.
I am so happy for all the players, Jurgen and all the supporters who willed this team on tonight to ensure we remind everyone including myself why we love this club and what it means to support these players and the manager.
Two more to go.
YNWA from across the pond!
Beautiful prose for a beautiful season of a beautiful team in The Beautiful Game.
If the worst case scenario happens and we finish trophiless in second place in the Premier League on 97 points, dozens above the third best team, with a first 11 with not one member we’d trade for someone better, and with a manager any Red would follow off a cliff, remind yourself that our worst case scenario is still a better result than most supporters of other clubs could ever dream of.
And if some Herbert wants to bring us the bear on the idea that history books will show no record of Liverpool this season, I hope that instead of frustration we feel love for what we’ve lived these last few months and pity for the soul of a person who makes that their focus rather than the beauty we’ve been so privileged to witness these last two years. “Yeah but no trophy lad” – you poor fucker. Your job is to try to bring us ‘back to Earth’, and why? Bitterness, frustration, seething hatred for a club that “thinks they are better than everyone” etc
Ride on you beautiful Reds, ride on.
Comment of the year. And so true.
There’s been times when people remember great teams who won fuck all… I give you Holland circa 74 to 78. There were the Hungarians and let us not forget the Brazil team in 1982. All who witnessed them still discuss them and none won anything.